Bob Colacello may have been ‘out’, but he was most certainly ‘in’ with the post-Vietnam party set. The former editor of Andy Warhol’s Interview magazine documented the good old-fashioned party days in his eponymous monthly column, which saw the writer gallivanting across New York city, flitting between gallery openings and film premieres, gritty after-hours club and formal dinner parties, sometimes in the course of one night. In 1975, two years after beginning the column, Colacello was handed one of the first miniature 35mm which he would carry in his pocket to capture the eclectic, anything-goes party era. Out chronicles the soirées where the self-proclaimed ‘accidental photographer’ captured some of the most intriguing personalities of the era; Jack Nicholson, Yves Saint Laurent, Raquel Welch, and Mick Jagger, with all the intimacy of a fellow party-goer. Amongst the black and white snapshots, many of which have never been published before, are images of those who didn’t survive the reckless drug-fuelled period, namely Truman Capote and Steve Rubell. RIP. FU